"Trevor is not a benign . There has always been a frightening, uncomfortable, cruel side to his work, particularly in his sensationalist appetite (which he shares with one of his great predecessors, Elizabeth Bowen, who gets a mention here) for seedy criminals, s, and s. In this volume, some tame s have their necks wrung, a girl pushes her mother's lover down two flights of stairs, a maniac pursues his estranged wife with a fantasy of revenge, and a con man replies to a series of s to get himself a driver and a free meal."
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Novelists from IrelandMemoiristsFellows of the Royal Society of LiteratureNon-fiction authors from IrelandEducators from Ireland
Original Language: English
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William Trevor
(published as William Trevor; 24 May 1928 – 20 November 2016) was an Irish novelist, short story writer, playwright, and television dramatist. Although he remained an Irish citizen, he and his wife in 1952 moved to England, where their two sons were born and where he worked as a teacher, sculptor, and for an advertising agency. In 1964 he became a full time writer. In 1976 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL). He was appointed in 1979 (CBE) and in 2002 (KBE). In 1994
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